In Mme Némirovsky’s masterpiece, the things which bring the most happiness to life are faith, children, home life, and the enduring love of a man and a woman. While drawing the portrait of the life-long romance between her hero and heroine Pierre and Agnes, Mme Némirovsky also presents a searing exposé of the hypocrisies and false values of provincial bourgeois France. A story of adventure and love amid the wars and social upheaval of the first part of the 20th century, it shows how Pierre and Agnes, who risk losing everything in order to be together, in the end have what really matters most. Written in stirring, restrained prose with vivid yet subtle descriptions, All Our Worldly Goods is a book for all lovers of romance and history.
This review originally appeared in the August 2012 edition of the Historical Novels Review.
(*NOTE: This book was sent to me by the Historical Novel Society in exchange for my honest opinion.)
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1 comment:
The story also captures war from the civilian point of view in terms of losing ones home, and being thrust into the unknown with no food, no means of protection, and no where to go to be safe. Even armies have provisions and know what is about to happen and where.
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